Armored CAR-T Cells

A few weeks ago, we posted an interview with Sattva Neelapu, MD from MD Anderson that was originally posted on the MD Anderson website, ‘CAR-T cell therapy : 9 things to know’. Let me first reference the following paragraph from this post :

‘Right now, CAR-T cell therapy targets the CD-19 molecule on the surface of cancer cells. The reason it fails in some patients is that the tumor cells mutate quickly and shed the target molecule, so the CAR-T cells can’t “see” the cancer anymore. I expect future CAR-T cell therapy products to target multiple molecules: two, three or even more different molecules on a particular tumor. That would allow CAR-T cells to still recognize the cancer, even if one target molecule disappears.’

And that brings us to a new term that we will be hearing about more and more in the near future : armored CAR-T Cells. This term originally popped up in a paper authored by Drs. Yeku and Brentjens, both from Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.

The article provides a nice, but not easy to read, description of the differences between first, second and third generation CAR-T development programs. And, please remember that the two CAR-T treatments currently approved by FDA [Kymriah (Novartis) and Yescarta (Gilead)] are first generation products. There are currently several second-generation CAR-T treatments in late stage clinical development that target MM [e.g., bb2121 (being jointly developed by Blue Bird Bio and Celgene)].

‘Patients who relapse after treatment with CAR T-cell therapy often no longer express the original target, which is referred to as immune escape. Brentjens says that armored CAR T cells are being developed to overcome the current limitations seen with CAR T-cell therapy. These CAR T cells are fortified with cytokines that can be pro-inflammatory, a co-stimulatory ligand, or an antibody that can block pathways such as PD-1 and PD-L1.

Brentjens says that approaches such as armored CAR T cells are the next step in the development of cellular therapies, as there are still many patients who will relapse on currently available CAR T-cell therapy. This is a step toward making the first iterations of CAR T-cell therapies even better, he adds.’

And now there is the inevitable question : ‘Are there clinical trials for this novel breakthrough ?’ The answer is a qualified, ‘Yes’, as the trial that is currently ongoing at MSKCC includes RR CLL, iNHL, DLBCL, ALL and CML but not yet MM.

About Author

I've been a primary Plasma Cell Leukemia patient since January 2014. My wife, Vicki, and I have two adult kids and one grandson (the light of our lives). The PCL hasn’t stopped us from doing what we love the most : travel, albeit with some extra precautions these days. I've had a +20 year career in various aspects of the pharma industry and am a retired President/CEO of a generic pharmaceutical company. This photo is hanging on the “Survivor Wall” of the Duke Bone Marrow Transplant Center with the proverbial MM “ monkey on my back”.